The Power of Having Fun: How Meaningful Breaks Help You Get More Done *and Feel Fantastic!
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About this ebook
Fun is the key to success!
If you want to be successful, having fun is not an option. It’s a necessity. By making fun a top priority—taking meaningful, enjoyable breaks each day, week, month, and year—you’ll not only be happier but be more productive, too!
Using scientific evidence, real-world case studies, and a healthy dose of wit, bestselling author Dave Crenshaw shows that a regular respite is like a little oasis in your workday. It refreshes and reinvigorates, recharges your batteries—helping you accomplish more with less effort!
The Power of Having Fun coaches you through the five-step system thousands of leaders have utilized to boost productivity and propel their careers—all while feeling fantastic! Let Dave Crenshaw lower your stress, raise your results, and restore recess to your routine.
“The simple wisdom in Dave’s book might just change your life.” —Seth Godin, New York Times-bestselling author of This Is Marketing
“Let’s face it, the nine-to-five workday is a thing of the past. Dave really gets that the companies that will ultimately succeed are those that embrace the flexible workday and empower their employees.” —Brian Halligan, cofounder and CEO, HubSpot
“The principles Dave teaches in this book have helped me be not only a more productive leader but a more grounded human being. Dave’s influence in my life and career has been invaluable.” —Catherine Hoke, founder and CEO, Defy Ventures
Read more from Dave Crenshaw
The Myth of Multitasking: How "Doing It All" Gets Nothing Done Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The Myth of Multitasking: How "Doing It All" Gets Nothing Done Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The Power of Having Fun: How Meaningful Breaks Help You Get More Done Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
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Reviews for The Power of Having Fun
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Book preview
The Power of Having Fun - Dave Crenshaw
PLEASE DIRECT YOUR ATTENTION TO THE FOLLOWING
Introduction. Seriously.
Before we begin, I need to clear the air.
This is not a book about fun.
This is a book about having fun. You may be thinking, Oh, great. I’m not even one hundred words in, and this guy has already pulled the rug out from under me!
But hold on a second. If you stick with me, you’ll understand that the point I’m making is vital.
If this were a book about fun, you might expect me to talk about the science of fun, the history of fun, the value of fun, and the philosophy of fun. I’d create an elaborate equation on a quantum level: If you take the square root of the song ‘Don’t Stop Believing,’ divide it by the cosine of a slice of pizza, and multiply that by ceaseless childhood wonder, you become a fun person.
You’d probably also expect me to be a corporately appropriate pseudocomedian with wacky ties and a synergistic attitude. But this isn’t that kind of book. And I’m not that kind of guy.
This is a book about action — less about learning, more about doing. Yes, you and I will occasionally dip our toes into the research behind how having fun helps make you more productive and more successful. We’ll even brush up against how fun can help you be happier. But in the end, this is a book about helping you make having fun a necessary part of your daily routine.
As a coach of leaders, I’ve spent years consulting with hundreds of individuals and training hundreds of thousands of people worldwide via events and videos. During that time, I’ve come to believe that taking action on knowledge is far more powerful than just having knowledge itself. In fact, learning something and then not acting on it is often educated failure.
Intelligent, hardworking people have gone to great lengths to conduct brilliant studies and wonderful research experiments. That information has value. Ultimately, however, I’m less concerned with an experiment attempted by someone else and more concerned with an experiment conducted by you.
That’s where this book comes in. I’ve designed it to be something like a private coaching session between you and me. Imagine that we’re sitting across from each other in your office. My goal is to help you unlock the power of having fun. It’s something that so many of us want to do, yet we forbid ourselves from doing it. I find that, for bizarre and occasionally sadistic reasons, far too many of us deprive ourselves of having fun. Yet the very thing that we prevent ourselves from doing is the very thing that can help us be more successful. Fun and work are not opposites. In fact, they are two sides of the same coin. Your work life and your personal life are inseparably connected.
Don’t just take my word for it. After all, a book is just words on a page. The power lies in what you do with the information you acquire. That’s my goal: to help you do something about having more fun in your day. I’ll make it easy and, yes, fun for you to experiment. But please experiment. Your day, your time, and your activities are the laboratory. You and I will put on our lab coats and pocket protectors and put your experiment into action.
Sound good? Great! Just a little more housekeeping . . .
My hope is that this book has value for anyone in pretty much any position or stage in their career. However, the people who are going to get the biggest bang for their book buck are those who have some degree of flexibility when it comes to their work schedule. In this hypothetical coaching-via-book situation, my assumption will be that I’m talking to someone who has some ability to control how they spend their time.
In other words, if you’re at the C-level, on salary, a free-lancer, a business owner, an entrepreneur, or even a stay-at-home mom or dad, you have the greatest opportunity to get the greatest value from this book. Why? Simply because a significant part of the experiment that you and I will be conducting has to do with crafting your schedule.
If you don’t fit into one of these categories, if you are earning an hourly wage, or if you are working two or three jobs at present, you might find the execution of some of these principles a little trickier. Yet, if you still dare to continue reading this book despite being in one of those situations, you will still find value. I’d recommend that you approach this book with the mindset How does this apply to me?
as opposed to This doesn’t apply to me.
Read with an open mind, experiment where you can, and I believe you’ll still uncover an em powering message.
Let’s start experimenting with The Power of Having Fun!
Part One
The Desert and the Oasis
CHAPTER 1
Lost in the Desert
Consider the tales of two executives . . . well, three.
Story One: Businesscraft
There was once a business owner. He was a young man growing a moderately successful business. He hired employees. He made the sales. He managed the managers. He processed the profits. And most of all, he hustled . . . hard.
So hard, in fact, that when he invited me to provide some productivity coaching, it was clear that he was on his last leg. He was dragging himself through roughly eighty work hours per week. When I first heard that number, my CEO-coach-Spidey-sense began tingling. Putting it bluntly, I’m of the belief that any person who works more than sixty hours per week just simply does not know how to manage time — regardless of how productive they believe they are.
We did a deep dive. We accounted for every lunch break, meeting, phone call, nook, and cranny. Was time management a problem? Of course. But deep within the recesses of this man’s schedule was a secret I was not expecting.
He was a paragon of the community. People flocked to him seeking guidance. He was well liked and had many important friends. His employees respected him. His competition feared him.
Yet he felt guilty, unproductive, and just a touch hypocritical — because a full twenty hours per week were lost to a secret habit he worked hard to hide. His wife and children had no idea. He would become the subject of scorn and ridicule among his peers were they to find out. You see, roughly twenty of those eighty working
hours were spent in another world . . .
. . . the World of Warcraft.
Each day, he spent hours on end wandering the cyber wilderness as a level 47 Shaman because, in the real world, he was emotionally, mentally, and physically exhausted. He felt that he continually had to keep up appearances for his family and employees. Yet his desire to play caused him to jump in and out of the mists of Azeroth throughout the day to do battle with humans and orcs — then jump back into his business to haggle with suppliers.
When he made his confession to me, he hung his head. He knew he’d been caught. He expected me to tell him it was time to grow up, get focused, and behave as a good business owner should.
Story Two: Power Couple
Next is the story of two executives. They were a married power couple who worked in the same company. They were highly successful in their respective careers.
Together, they were a force to be reckoned with. She excelled in management and marketing. He was a wizard at the technical and financial details. They were a match made for the cover of Fortune magazine. They completed each other, professionally speaking, and they had me at Hello, will you help us?
Their relationship outside of work was going stale. Technically speaking, this couple worked a reasonable number of hours each week, meaning they left the office at a reasonable time. The problem was that they never really clocked out because when they got home, every conversation was about work.
Tuna casserole for dinner? Let’s talk sales strategy.
Date night? Action items for the upcoming marketing campaign.
Changing the baby’s diaper? Reevaluate current employee output.
While I helped them on the productivity side, we uncovered a deeper issue that needed resolution. Because a company is a reflection of its leadership, the couple’s lack of balance in their personal lives had begun to be reflected in the lives of their employees. Like their fearless, well-qualified leaders, employees had become drained and were losing enthusiasm for the company.
Because this couple was unable to connect with each other outside of work, not only was their marriage at risk but the business as well.
Defining the Desert
What do these stories have in common?
Both occurred in a metaphorical desert.
If you’ve ever seen a desert epic, such as Lawrence of Arabia, you’ll recognize that, sooner or later, someone’s going to have to walk a very, very long way to get from one side of the desert to the other.
Man, I hate those scenes. If you’re like me, you just can’t wait for them to end. Look, I get it, Peter O’Toole is thirsty. Give him a Vitaminwater or cut to the next scene.
This perhaps overused desert trope is symbolic of many struggles in our lives, isn’t it? Nothing comes easy. In spite of adversity, we need to keep pressing forward for what we desire because, despite the obstacles, we can make it! Hard work and perseverance are rewarded! Play a fanfare! Start the parade! Hail the conquering hero!
So, what’s your desert today?
When I say desert, I have a specific definition in mind. A desert is how I’ll refer to an extended period of deprivation and/ or chaos in your life.
What is something that you’re pushing yourself through? What’s a situation for you that’s slow and painful, where you’re ignoring the signs that life is giving you to slow down or stop? Where are you putting up with extended periods of chaos because you’re in such a hurry to get to the other side?
Before you attempt to answer these questions, it might be helpful to explore some possible deserts. Often, we carry our own deserts with us. What do I mean? In coaching executives and managers around the world, I’ve come across several deserts people carry on their backs as they live life.
THE RETIREMENT DESERT
Many people relentlessly push themselves in careers they hate just to reach the glorious shores of retirement. All the years and stress they put in will finally pay off. Someday, maybe, everything will be great, right? You can finally buy that RV you’ve always wanted and drive across the country. Or maybe you’ll just live on a cruise ship in perpetuity — just one more slice of cheesecake . . . I don’t want to be too full for shuffleboard this afternoon!
In the meantime, there’s a lot of misery for a lot of folks. A study conducted by Harris and the University of Phoenix found that 59 percent of American workers wish they were in a different